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Why did some medieval frescoes survive and others did not?

Reading Time: 1:50 min

The survival of medieval frescoes depends on a combination of materials, technique, environment, and later human actions. When several favourable factors came together, frescoes could last for centuries. When they did not, damage or loss followed – sometimes very quickly.

Factors Favouring the Long Life of Frescoes

Good Technique and Materials

True fresco (buon fresco) was painted onto fresh, wet lime plaster.
As the plaster dried, the pigments became chemically bound to the wall, making the painting very durable.

High-quality lime plaster, well mixed and properly cured, created a stable surface.

Mineral pigments (earth colours, ochres, iron oxides) are naturally resistant to light and ageing.

Stable Building Conditions

– Dry, well-built walls, often thick stone masonry, protected frescoes from moisture.

– Limited exposure to direct sunlight, which reduces fading.

– Stable indoor climate, with slow changes in temperature and humidity.

Continuous Use and Care

– Chapels that remained in regular use were more likely to be maintained.

– Roofs, gutters, and walls were repaired, preventing water from reaching the paintings.

Some frescoes were later whitewashed rather than destroyed, which accidentally preserved them beneath lime layers.

Factors that Shorten the Life of Frescoes

Moisture and Salts

– Rising damp from the ground draws water and salts into walls.

As salts crystallise, they cause flaking and powdering of paint and plaster.

– Repeated wetting and drying slowly weakens the surface.

Poor Materials or Technique

– Secco painting (painting on dry plaster) is less durable than true fresco.

– Organic pigments and binders fade or decay more easily.

– Thin or badly prepared plaster layers crack and detach.

Structural Movement

– Cracks in walls caused by settlement, earthquakes, or roof failure break the painted surface.

– Even small movements can cause plaster to detach from the masonry.

Factors that Cause Rapid Damage

Water Ingress

– Leaking roofs, broken gutters, or damaged masonry can destroy frescoes within years – or even months.

– Flooding or long-term water exposure leads to staining, salt damage, and loss of paint layers.

Later Alterations and Neglect

Frescoes were often plastered over, scraped, or deliberately destroyed during religious or stylistic changes.

– Abandoned buildings suffer from rapid decay due to lack of maintenance.

Inappropriate Restoration

– Use of cement, synthetic paints, or modern sealants traps moisture inside walls.

– Hard modern materials are incompatible with soft medieval lime plaster.

– Overcleaning can remove original paint layers irreversibly.

Human Activity

– Touching, vibration, smoke from candles, and earlier heating systems all contribute to wear.

– Modern pollution accelerates chemical decay in exposed sites.